Jon Tydda
jon at tydda.plus.com
Sun Jun 26 16:50:50 CDT 2011
Typical! Just as when doing a crossword, and I read the clue out to someone else, and I immediately think of the answer, as soon as I ask the lists, I find it :-) If anyone's interested, you do it like this: Click on All Photographs in the Catalog panel in the Library module, and then doing a metadata filter using the library filter bar to find all images shot with one of the lenses. Then select all of them (ctl/cmd A). In the Develop module turn Auto Sync on (the switch next to the Sync button at the bottom right.) Then go down to the Lens Corrections panel and apply your correction. It will be applied to all of your selected images. Do this for the rest of your lenses. Finally, turn Auto Sync off by clicking back on the switch. You may also want to set the correction as the default for when you import new images. For each lens: find an image, fix just the lens issue (hit reset beforehand to make sure you haven't made any other changes), go to Develop>Set Default Settings>Update. Jon _____ From: Jon Tydda [mailto:jon at tydda.plus.com] Sent: 26 June 2011 22:42 To: 'Off Topic'; 'Discussion of Hardware and Software issues' Subject: Adobe Lightroom 3 Hi all I'm hoping that someone else out there uses Adobe Lightroom 3 - Because I've got a lens that distorts straight lines a lot, and I can't work out how to apply the correction manually, rather than to each individual picture in turn (especially to the current album of over 600 photos...). Does anyone have any ideas?? Jon